Word: anger
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Events are exploding in the spiritual and confidence vacuum left by Watergate. The economic and energy crises are producing fear and anger out of proportion to their threat to our way of life. In particular, as the economy turns down and jobs are lost in the months ahead, this anger is likely to be directed against Nixon...
...deflation had a number of causes. Viet Nam and the protest it stimulated were no longer national obsessions. Few of the stars of the 1969-70 Chicago Seven trial still shine very brightly. Judge Julius Hoffman, who presided more in anger than in cool judiciousness, is in semiretirement. Abbie Hoffman now faces a serious drug charge in New York. Rennie Davis has become a follower of the teen-age Indian guru Maharaj Ji; during the latest trial, Davis occasionally folded himself into the lotus position in the courtroom. David Dellinger, 58, the elder of the original Seven, has been...
...Psychology and Social Relations Department could hire Nixon to teach a pro-seminar on "Anger and Respect: How to Stay Cool When the Going Gets Tough." Or Nixon might make a fine professor of Population Statistics: His figures proved U.S. Marines destroyed all of North Vietnam ten times over...
...smashing Italian Journalist Oriana Fallaci published in the New Republic. Fallaci, whose belt already holds the scalps of Henry Kissinger, Willy Brandt and Nguyen Van Thieu, scored again with the revelation that the Shah is not, after all, a ladies' man. What prompted His Sublime Highness's anger, however, was something quite simple. Fallaci had asked him if it were true that he had reverted to harem, taking another wife in addition to his third official one, Empress Farah, 35. Said the Shah: "A stupid, vile, disgusting libel...
Bruck seems nearly to adopt the tone and format of Stone's paper. The movie is compressed, ironic, a little crude in style, but vigorous and cutting in its anger. Stone used to box off conflicting quotations or incidental insights for ironic illustrative effect in the news letter, and Bruck does something similar here. He shows Stone making a general point about the dangers of newsmen getting chummy with their sources, then cuts away to a scene of Ron Ziegler playing tennis with an ABC correspondent, while Tricia Nixon looks on. He shows Stone elaborating on the general slipperiness...